Programme Performance — Innovosoltech
2-Year Programme Data

Performance,
not projections.

Every number on this page comes from two years of actual CCM operations across our patient population. No industry benchmarks. No modelling. What we actually see.

↓   Scroll to see the full breakdown   ·   Real data only
90%

Monthly Billable Rate

Of enrolled patients billable each month across the active programme

60%+

Retain 12 Months+

Continue past 12 months with ongoing chronic care needs

1–2%

Monthly Dropout

Of previously billed patients exit in any given month

Retention Over Time

How long patients stay

Retention patterns across the enrolled patient population — by duration milestone.

First 6 Months
90%

New Enrollees

Approximately 90% of newly enrolled patients remain active through the first 6 months. This is the highest-engagement phase — patients are newly onboarded, conditions are being actively tracked, and the value of monthly coordination is most visible.

Months 6–12
80%

Ongoing Retention

Across the full enrolled population — including patients past the 6-month mark — approximately 80% remain billable in any given month. Attrition is gradual, not sudden. Most exits are expected and planned for.

12 Months and Beyond
60%+

Long-Term Patients

Over 60% of enrolled patients continue past the 12-month mark. A meaningful subset continue through 15–18 months. These are typically patients with multiple active chronic conditions who benefit from ongoing monthly coordination, medication oversight, and specialist liaison.

Monthly Billable Rate

What drives the
billable number

Billable rate is not a fixed figure — it depends on patient engagement, insurance coverage, and how the programme is run.

Overall Programme
90%

Monthly Billable Rate

Across the full active enrolled population each month. This includes patients at all stages of their CCM journey — newly enrolled through long-term.

Assumes secondary insurance is verified before first contact — no out-of-pocket billing to patient
New Enrollees — First 6 Months
~90%

Active Through Month 6

New patients in the first 6 months show the highest engagement and lowest voluntary dropout. This is when the service delivers the most clearly visible value — post-discharge coordination, medication stabilisation, and active follow-up.

Doctor personally advising enrolment significantly increases both uptake and early retention
Dropout Analysis

Why patients leave

Understanding dropout is as important as understanding retention. Most exits are predictable, many are preventable, and some are simply part of caring for an elderly chronic population.

Primary · Uncontrollable
85+

Patient Death — 85+ Cohort

The single largest dropout driver. Patients aged 85 and above carry a significantly higher mortality rate due to multi-system decline. Death is year-round in this cohort but peaks sharply in winter months.

Primary · Preventable
$0

Out-of-Pocket Billing

When a provider charges above Medicare’s rate, the shortfall becomes an out-of-pocket cost to the patient. Patients who receive unexpected bills disengage quickly. This is fully avoidable with secondary insurance verification upfront.

Secondary · Expected
1–2%

Recovery Milestone

Patients who have recovered well from surgery, stroke, rehab, or a fall may feel they no longer need monthly coordination. This is a positive outcome, not a failure. Typically concentrated in months 3–8.

Secondary · Expected
5–10%

Transition to Higher Acuity

Roughly 5–10% of patients — predominantly in the 80–90+ age range with severe multi-chronic decline — transition to skilled nursing or hospice. Families shift focus. This is a care stage transition, not dissatisfaction.

December through February is the highest mortality window.

Cold weather, seasonal illness, reduced mobility, and holiday stress compound in patients aged 85+. This is predictable — plan new patient enrollment pushes in Q4 to offset the expected winter attrition. Do not misread the Dec–Feb dip as a service quality issue.

Relative Mortality Risk — Monthly
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
What Moves the Number

Retention drivers,
from real interactions

From two years of monthly patient and caregiver interactions, these are the consistent factors that determine how long a patient stays enrolled.

What Keeps Patients Enrolled Longer
No out-of-pocket cost

Secondary insurance covering the gap is the single biggest retention lever. Patients who never see a bill stay enrolled at 90–95% through 12 months.

Doctor personally advises enrolment

When the physician directly recommends CCM to the patient at point of care, uptake and early retention both increase significantly. Trust transfers.

Caregiver involvement

Patients whose family members or caregivers are engaged in monthly calls and care updates stay enrolled longer and are more medication-adherent.

Active chronic coordination needs

Patients with multiple ongoing conditions — medication changes, specialist visits, lab follow-ups — see clear monthly value and are less likely to voluntarily unenrol.

Continuous new patient flow

With a steady flow of new enrollees, the 2–3% monthly loss is fully offset. The programme grows net month-on-month rather than slowly contracting.

What Accelerates Dropout
Unexpected billing to patient

The most controllable dropout driver. If a patient receives an out-of-pocket charge — even a small one — disengagement follows quickly. Preventable with upfront secondary insurance verification.

Patient death in 85+ cohort

The highest-mortality cohort. Multi-system decline, seasonal illness peaks (Dec–Feb), and reduced mobility all compound. Predictable — plan Q4 enrollment to offset winter attrition.

High-acuity care transition

Patients who transition to skilled nursing facility or hospice care exit CCM because families shift focus to that stage of care. Not dissatisfaction — a natural care continuum event.

Successful recovery

Post-rehab and post-surgical patients who stabilise well sometimes feel they no longer need monthly check-ins. This is a programme success, not a failure — but it does reduce headcount.

Let’s Talk

Numbers you can plan around.
Not promises.

If you want to understand what CCM performance looks like for your specific patient population, this is the conversation to have.

hello@innovosoltech.com